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The Transformation Of American Abolitionism Fighting Slavery In The Early Republic Richard S Newman

  • SKU: BELL-2135946
The Transformation Of American Abolitionism Fighting Slavery In The Early Republic Richard S Newman
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Transformation Of American Abolitionism Fighting Slavery In The Early Republic Richard S Newman instant download after payment.

Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.27 MB
Pages: 271
Author: Richard S. Newman
ISBN: 9780807826713, 9780807860458, 9780807849989, 0807826715, 0807849987, 080786045X
Language: English
Year: 2002

Product desciption

The Transformation Of American Abolitionism Fighting Slavery In The Early Republic Richard S Newman by Richard S. Newman 9780807826713, 9780807860458, 9780807849989, 0807826715, 0807849987, 080786045X instant download after payment.

Most accounts date the birth of American abolitionism to 1831, when William Lloyd Garrison began publishing his radical antislavery newspaper, The Liberator. In fact, however, the abolition movement had been born with the American Republic. In the decades following the Revolution, abolitionists worked steadily to eliminate slavery and racial injustice, and their tactics and strategies constantly evolved. Tracing the development of the abolitionist movement from the 1770s to the 1830s, Richard Newman focuses particularly on its transformation from a conservative lobbying effort into a fiery grassroots reform cause. What began in late-eighteenth-century Pennsylvania as an elite movement espousing gradual legal reform began to change in the 1820s as black activists, female reformers, and nonelite whites pushed their way into the antislavery movement. Located primarily in Massachusetts, these new reformers demanded immediate emancipation, and they revolutionized abolitionist strategies and tactics--lecturing extensively, publishing gripping accounts of life in bondage, and organizing on a grassroots level. Their attitudes and actions made the abolition movement the radical cause we view it as today.

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